878 research outputs found
Topological phase separation in 2D quantum lattice Bose-Hubbard system away from half-filling
We suppose that the doping of the 2D hard-core boson system away from
half-filling may result in the formation of multi-center topological
inhomogeneity (defect) such as charge order (CO) bubble domain(s) with Bose
superfluid (BS) and extra bosons both localized in domain wall(s), or a {\it
topological} CO+BS {\it phase separation}, rather than an uniform mixed CO+BS
supersolid phase. Starting from the classical model we predict the properties
of the respective quantum system. The long-wavelength behavior of the system is
believed to remind that of granular superconductors, CDW materials, Wigner
crystals, and multi-skyrmion system akin in a quantum Hall ferromagnetic state
of a 2D electron gas. To elucidate the role played by quantum effects and that
of the lattice discreteness we have addressed the simplest nanoscopic
counterpart of the bubble domain in a checkerboard CO phase of 2D hc-BH square
lattice. It is shown that the relative magnitude and symmetry of
multi-component order parameter are mainly determined by the sign of the
and transfer integrals. In general, the topologically inhomogeneous phase
of the hc-BH system away from the half-filling can exhibit the signatures both
of , and symmetry of the off-diagonal order.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Summarizing the evidence of the performance of diagnostic tests for Salmonella spp. in swine: A systematic review approach
A systematic review was undertaken in order to identify, critically appraise and synthesize the existing literature on the diagnostic performance (e.g. Se and Sp of the test) and agreement (e.g. kappa and correlation coefficients) of conventional bacterial culture, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and polymerase chain reaction assays used to detect and monitor Salmonella spp. in swine. 2110 citations were identified and 160 were relevant to the research objectives. Quality assessment is complete for 150 of these references; 73 were excluded due to estimates of test performance not being clearly reported and insufficient raw data available for post-hoc analysis. Although the review is still in progress, early experiences indicate problems with lack of standardization in the design, conduct and reporting of studies of diagnostic test evaluation in this area. This review will provide valuable information by identifying gaps in existing research and providing direction for future work on the standardization of tests examined in this review
Topological solitons in highly anisotropic two dimensional ferromagnets
e study the solitons, stabilized by spin precession in a classical
two--dimensional lattice model of Heisenberg ferromagnets with non-small
easy--axis anisotropy. The properties of such solitons are treated both
analytically using the continuous model including higher then second powers of
magnetization gradients, and numerically for a discrete set of the spins on a
square lattice. The dependence of the soliton energy on the number of spin
deviations (bound magnons) is calculated. We have shown that the
topological solitons are stable if the number exceeds some critical value
. For and the intermediate values of anisotropy
constant ( is an exchange constant), the soliton
properties are similar to those for continuous model; for example, soliton
energy is increasing and the precession frequency is decreasing
monotonously with growth. For high enough anisotropy we found some fundamentally new soliton features absent for continuous
models incorporating even the higher powers of magnetization gradients. For
high anisotropy, the dependence of soliton energy E(N) on the number of bound
magnons become non-monotonic, with the minima at some "magic" numbers of bound
magnons. Soliton frequency have quite irregular behavior with
step-like jumps and negative values of for some regions of . Near
these regions, stable static soliton states, stabilized by the lattice effects,
exist.Comment: 17 page
Explanation and Elaboration Document for the STROBE-Vet Statement: Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology—Veterinary Extension
The STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) statement was first published in 2007 and again in 2014. The purpose of the original STROBE was to provide guidance for authors, reviewers and editors to improve the comprehensiveness of reporting; however, STROBE has a unique focus on observational studies. Although much of the guidance provided by the original STROBE document is directly applicable, it was deemed useful to map those statements to veterinary concepts, provide veterinary examples and highlight unique aspects of reporting in veterinary observational studies. Here, we present the examples and explanations for the checklist items included in the STROBE-Vet Statement. Thus, this is a companion document to the STROBE-Vet Statement Methods and process document, which describes the checklist and how it was developed
Methods and Processes of Developing the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology – Veterinary (STROBE-Vet) Statement
BACKGROUND
Reporting of observational studies in veterinary research presents challenges that often are not addressed in published reporting guidelines.
OBJECTIVE
To develop an extension of the STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) statement that addresses unique reporting requirements for observational studies in veterinary medicine related to health, production, welfare, and food safety.
DESIGN
Consensus meeting of experts.
SETTING
Mississauga, Canada.
PARTICIPANTS
Seventeen experts from North America, Europe, and Australia.
METHODS
Experts completed a pre-meeting survey about whether items in the STROBE statement should be modified or added to address unique issues related to observational studies in animal species with health, production, welfare, or food safety outcomes. During the meeting, each STROBE item was discussed to determine whether or not rewording was recommended and whether additions were warranted. Anonymous voting was used to determine consensus.
RESULTS
Six items required no modifications or additions. Modifications or additions were made to the STROBE items 1 (title and abstract), 3 (objectives), 5 (setting), 6 (participants), 7 (variables), 8 (data sources/measurement), 9 (bias), 10 (study size), 12 (statistical methods), 13 (participants), 14 (descriptive data), 15 (outcome data), 16 (main results), 17 (other analyses), 19 (limitations), and 22 (funding).
CONCLUSION
The methods and processes used were similar to those used for other extensions of the STROBE statement. The use of this STROBE statement extension should improve reporting of observational studies in veterinary research by recognizing unique features of observational studies involving food-producing and companion animals, products of animal origin, aquaculture, and wildlife
Soliton-Magnon Scattering in Two-Dimensional Isotropic Ferromagnets
It is studied the scattering of magnons by the 2d topological
Belavin-Polyakov soliton in isotropic ferromagnet. Analytical solutions of the
scattering problem are constructed: (i) exactly for any magnon wave vectors for
the partial wave with the azimuthal number m=1 (translational mode), and (ii)
in the long- and short-wave limits for the rest modes. The magnon mode
frequencies are found for the finite size magnets. An effective equation of the
soliton motion is constructed. The magnon density of states, connected with the
soliton-magnon interaction, is found in a long-wave approximation.Comment: 4 pages, REVTe
Inhomogeneity of the intrinsic magnetic field in superconducting YBa2Cu3OX compounds as revealed by rare-earth EPR-probe
X-band electron paramagnetic resonance on doped Er3+ and Yb3+ ions in
Y0.99(Yb,Er)0.01Ba2Cu3OX compounds with different oxygen contents in the wide
temperature range (4-120)K have been made. In the superconducting species, the
strong dependencies of the linewidth and resonance line position from the sweep
direction of the applied magnetic field are revealed at the temperatures
significantly below TC. The possible origins of the observed hysteresis are
analyzed. Applicability of the presented EPR approach to extract information
about the dynamics of the flux-line lattice and critical state parameters
(critical current density, magnetic penetration depth, and characteristic
spatial scale of the inhomogeneity) is discussedComment: 17 pages, 5 Figures. Renewed versio
A systematic review/meta-regression approach: factors influencing the diagnostic accuracy of bacterial culture and serology used to determine Salmonella status in swine
A systematic review was undertaken in order to evaluate the existing global knowledge-base on the accuracy of selected diagnostic tests for Salmonella in pigs. Unique individual- and herd-level test observations of culture (index test) vs. culture (reference standard) and ELISA vs. culture (n=129 and 31, observations, respectively) were extracted from 22 primary research studies. Significant heterogeneity between observations was detected in all categories. A meta-regression analysis was subsequently conducted to identify variables that could explain the variation in test sensitivity (Se) and specificity (Sp) among studies, and to quantify the association between these variables and test Se and Sp
Implementing and sustaining higher education service-learning initiatives: Revisiting Young et al's organizational tactics
Although the value of service-learning opportunities has long been aligned to student engagement, global citizenship, and employability, the rhetoric can be far removed from the reality of coordinating such activities within higher education. This article stems from arts-based service-learning initiatives with Indigenous communities in Australia. It highlights challenges encountered by the projects and the tactics used to overcome them. These are considered in relation to Young, Shinnar, Ackerman, Carruthers, and Young’s four tactics for starting and sustaining service-learning initiatives. The article explores the realities of service-learning initiatives that exist at the edge of institutional funding and rely on the commitment of key individuals. The research revises Young et al.’s four tactics and adds the fifth tactic of organizational commitment, which emerged as a distinct strategy used to prompt new commitment, enact existing commitment, and extend limited commitment at the organizational level
- …